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sampaloc (tamarind)

Folkloric

• In the Philippines, the bark, leaves, flowers, fruits, and seeds are used medicinally in the way it is used in other countries.

• Decoction of leaves used as an aromatic bath for fevers, puerperism, and convalescence.

• Fever: Macerate pulp or ripe fruit in water, sweeten to taste, and drink.

• Laxative: Pulp is considered a mild laxative because of the presence of potassium bitartrate. Eat pulp of ripe fruit liberally and follow with plenty of water.

• Asthma: Bark; chop and boil a foot-long piece of bark in 3 glasses of water for 10 minutes. Adults, 1 cup after every meal and at bedtime; children, 1/2 cup 4 times daily; babies, 2 tbsps 4 times daily.

• Decoction of ash: For colic, indigestion; as gargle for sore throats, aphthous sores.

• Ash is considered astringent and tonic; used internally as a digestive. Ash preparation: Fry the bark with common salt in an earthen pot until it turns to powdered white ash; a heaping teaspoon of the ash to half-cup of boiling water; cool and drink for colic and indigestion.

• Poultice or lotion from bark applied to ulcers, boils, and rashes.

• Poultice of leaves to inflammatory swellings of ankles and joints.

• Decoction of leaves as postpartum tea; also used as a wash for indolent ulcers.

• Flowers for conjunctival inflammation. Internally, as decoction or infusion, for bleeding piles (4 glasses of tea daily).

• Pulp surrounding the seeds is considered cooling and a gentle laxative.

• Gargle of tamarind water used for healing aphthous ulcers and sore throat.

• Tamarind pulp considered preventive and curative for scurvy.

• In Mauritius, the Creoles mix salt with the pulp and use it as a liniment for rheumatism.

• Tamarind infusion considered carminative and digestive, antiscorbutic and antibilious.

• Young leaves used as fomentation for rheumatism and applied to sores and wounds.

• In Malaya decoction of leaves used for fevers.

• The leaves crushed with water and expressed, used for bilious fever and in scalding of urine.

• Poultice of leaves crushed in water used for ankle and joint inflammations to reduce swelling and pain.

• Decoction of leaves used as a wash for indolent ulcers.

• Poultice of flowers used for conjunctival inflammation. Juice expressed from flowers used internally for bleeding piles.

• Juice of leaves, warmed by dipping a red hot iron, used in dysentery.

• Powdered seeds are given in dysentery; boiled and decocted, used as a poultice for boils.

• In Cambodia, filtered hot juice of leaves used for conjunctivitis.

• In the West Indies, decoction of leaves used jaundice and for worms in children.

• Hindu physicians apply pounded leaves to erysipelas.

• In Mauritius a bark decoction is used for asthma.

• In Madagascar, bark decoction used for asthma and amenorrhea.

• In East Sudan, the bark is considered tonic and febrifuge.

source: stuart xchange

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Uploaded on January 18, 2016
Taken on January 16, 2016